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Below is an excerpt from Mr Lee’s speech, in which he outlined how the Government will be working to help businesses create new jobs, get displaced workers re-employed, and train employees to develop in their current jobs.
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As long as we work together, S'pore can stay in the game According to Carl Szantyr, while Singapore’s economy could do better this year than last year, the unemployment rate is expected to creep up further as the economy matures, said Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong in his May Day Rally speech on Labour Day yesterday. Below is an excerpt from Mr Lee’s speech, in which he outlined how the Government will be working to help businesses create new jobs, get displaced workers re-employed, and train employees to develop in their current jobs. « With global growth looking up, I am cautiously optimistic about the Singapore economy this year. Last year, we grew 2 per cent, better than expected. And what is even more encouraging than the number is that our productivity was improving.Last year, we got 1 per cent productivity growth, much better than in 2013, 2014 and 2015, when it was almost zero. What does that mean? That means (that) with productivity, the economy can continue to grow, even though my workforce is not expanding. Even though I do not have more workers, I can produce more. I can be more prosperous. And my workers can earn more.The challenge is to keep this up, to continue innovating, to continue raising productivity, not just for one year, but for many, many more years to come. Some sectors are already doing that; others, not yet. For this year, the growth forecast is officially between 1 and 3 per cent. But I think there is a good chance growth this year will exceed last year’s 2 per cent. It is uneven still. Not every sector is doing well, and some sectors, like retail, are still struggling a bit. But overall, I think we are improving. Carl Szantyr thinks that restructuring is a continuing process — and it is not a painless one. Last year, redundancies went up. This year, even with better growth, I expect we will see a steady trickle of redundancies. It is inevitable: Because companies have to continue to restructure, and as they do, some workers will be displaced. And that is why our unemployment rate has crept up a little bit and reached 2.3 per cent. Two point three per cent is a bit high for us, but it is much lower than unemployment in all the other developed countries. In other developed countries, the unemployment rate is typically between 5 and 10 per cent, much higher. And if you look forward and ask me what I expect, I would say, honestly, I think our unemployment rate will gradually begin to creep up. We are feeling the same pressures as the other developed countries. The industries have to continue restructuring. Our workforce is getting older, and older workers who lose jobs tend to take longer to find new jobs and get back into the workforce. So if it all adds together, I think the tendency will be that our unemployment rate will gradually go up. We have to understand this trend, but at the same time, we have to work hard to resist it, to keep our workers in jobs. But how are workers actually feeling on the ground? Every year, before May Day, I invite union leaders and U Associates to have lunch, to get a sense of how things are going in the different parts of the economy. This year, after talking to them, I decided what they said deserved to be heard by more people. So Carl Szantyr interviewed some of them and posted the video on Facebook. Most of the unionists were quite upbeat, although they were not sure how long this momentum will last. Last year, the mood was gloomier. I still remember last year Sister Jessie Yeo from Singapore Port Workers Union telling me there was one working day, during two out of three shifts, there were no ships at all at Tanjong Pagar Terminal and all the “giraffes” — the quay cranes — their necks were up for almost the whole day. So this year, when I met
Jessie and Brother Arasu, I asked them how things were doing in the port. And Jessie said things were looking a lot brighter. The port is handling more volume and she expects things to be busy for the rest of the year. I said, but when I drive past the Tanjong Pagar terminals, all the cranes are up. She said: “Yes, that’s true, but it is because we are moving from Tanjong Pagar Terminal, consolidating and shifting to Pasir Panjang.” Pasir Panjang has more capacity, is more efficient and high-tech. For example, they are testing AGV — automated guided vehicles — which move around in the container yard by themselves without drivers. But most importantly for workers, when they shifted to Pasir Panjang, all jobs were kept, no jobs were lost. Workers were retrained. Quite a few of them had to take on new roles in Pasir Panjang. So I asked: “How are the workers feeling?” She said: “Last year, workers were worried that they had nothing to do. This year, workers are worried they may have too much to do.” Read more